On 09/28/2012 11:53 AM, Dragan Jurkovic wrote:
> Forgot to mention - eth0 does have routeback option and I do have
> split DNS for my firewall - i.e. it resolves to 192.168.201.Y
> internally.
If you have split DNS then why doesn;t it resolve to 192.168.2.1.X???
That way, the router would not have to do anything.
-Tom
PS -- and it's really silly to use X and Y when you are referring to
private addresses.
--
Tom Eastep \ When I die, I want to go like my Grandfather who
Shoreline, \ died peacefully in his sleep. Not screaming like
Washington, USA \ all of the passengers in his car
http://shorewall.net \________________________________________________

On Fri, Sep 28, 2012 at 3:01 PM, Tom Eastep <teastep@...> wrote:
> On 09/28/2012 11:53 AM, Dragan Jurkovic wrote:
>
>> Forgot to mention - eth0 does have routeback option and I do have
>> split DNS for my firewall - i.e. it resolves to 192.168.201.Y
>> internally.
>
> If you have split DNS then why doesn;t it resolve to 192.168.2.1.X???
> That way, the router would not have to do anything.
What I am trying to achieve is to access IMAP server via smartphone
mail application - so in smartphone I have IMAPS server set to
"firewall.mycompany.com:NNNNN". I am trying to have same configuration
when accessing IMAPS server via smartphone connected internally via
WiFi (therefore getting 192.168.201 address) - I don't want to change
smartphone config every time it connects to internal network.
Internally firewall.mycompany.com resolves to 192.168.201 address. All
other internal mail clients are using internal address of IMAPS
server, of course.
>
> -Tom
> PS -- and it's really silly to use X and Y when you are referring to
> private addresses.
True - silly me!
> --
> Tom Eastep \ When I die, I want to go like my Grandfather who
> Shoreline, \ died peacefully in his sleep. Not screaming like
> Washington, USA \ all of the passengers in his car
> http://shorewall.net \________________________________________________
>
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On 09/28/2012 12:17 PM, Dragan Jurkovic wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 28, 2012 at 3:01 PM, Tom Eastep <teastep@...> wrote:
>> On 09/28/2012 11:53 AM, Dragan Jurkovic wrote:
>>
>>> Forgot to mention - eth0 does have routeback option and I do have
>>> split DNS for my firewall - i.e. it resolves to 192.168.201.Y
>>> internally.
>>
>> If you have split DNS then why doesn;t it resolve to 192.168.2.1.X???
>> That way, the router would not have to do anything.
>
> What I am trying to achieve is to access IMAP server via smartphone
> mail application - so in smartphone I have IMAPS server set to
> "firewall.mycompany.com:NNNNN". I am trying to have same configuration
> when accessing IMAPS server via smartphone connected internally via
> WiFi (therefore getting 192.168.201 address) - I don't want to change
> smartphone config every time it connects to internal network.
> Internally firewall.mycompany.com resolves to 192.168.201 address. All
> other internal mail clients are using internal address of IMAPS
> server, of course.
>
>>
>> -Tom
>> PS -- and it's really silly to use X and Y when you are referring to
>> private addresses.
And 192.168.2.201 is an address on the Shorewall Router?
-Tom
--
Tom Eastep \ When I die, I want to go like my Grandfather who
Shoreline, \ died peacefully in his sleep. Not screaming like
Washington, USA \ all of the passengers in his car
http://shorewall.net \________________________________________________